By Cogan Schneier | November 14, 2017
The attorney general testified Tuesday before the House Judiciary Committee on a range of issues.
By Greg Land | November 14, 2017
Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed has replaced Interim Municipal Public Defender Rosalie Joy with Kenneth Days III, who has served as the office's managing attorney since 2008. Civil rights groups and attorneys have decried what they said was an effort to oust Joy by some Municipal Court judges angered by her efforts to keep indigent defendants out of jail.
By Samantha Joseph | November 14, 2017
"There is, however, one thing forbidden: vegetables," plaintiffs attorney Ari Bargil wrote in a brief to the Third District Court of Appeal.
By Erin Mulvaney | November 14, 2017
“There is a lot of confusion on what the law requires that has been going on for a long time,” said Sam Schwartz-Fenwick, a partner at Seyfarth Shaw in Chicago. “More uncertainty is negatively perceived by many employers, who prefer to work in black and white, not shades of gray.”
By R. Robin McDonald | November 14, 2017
Worth County Sheriff Jeff Hobby's order to lock down a county high school for four hours while every student was physically searched for drugs has resulted in his indictment, his suspension from office and a $3 million settlement.
By Colby Hamilton | November 13, 2017
Plaintiffs and amici supporters argue that the government seeks a too-wide interpretation of the limits to federal courts' powers over the executive branch.
By Colby Hamilton | November 13, 2017
The Second Circuit revived a Brooklyn prisoner's complaint that a jail policy forbidding inmates stuffed animals violated his religious rights.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Michael H. Reed, Richard W. Foltz, Jr. and Joseph J. Serritella | November 13, 2017
Philadelphia unveils statue of Octavius V. Catto—the city's first public monument to an individual African-American.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Angela D. Giampolo | November 13, 2017
Earlier this summer in Matal v. Tam (formerly Lee v. Tam), the U.S. Supreme Court (SCOTUS) struck down the restriction on the registration of marks that “disparage” under Section 2(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. Section 1052(a).
By Katheryn Tucker | November 10, 2017
Alicia Coleman, had been employed through a job training and employment agency in Fort Benning, Georgia as a 911 operator, a job she had held for nearly a decade. She alleged that she was terminated in 2016 after her period came on unexpectedly while at work
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